Prof. Y. Shirley Meng presented what she called “the case for hope” for a clean, sustainable energy future during a recent TEDxChicago event.

By Paul Dailing

Electric cars that drive for 500 miles on a six-minute charge. Neighborhoods where battery storage systems are as ubiquitous as refrigerators. A combination of lithium-metal, sodium, solid-state and flow batteries filling the massive energy storage gap in a way that promotes both the environment and human equity.

“It is not a dream,” Prof. Y. Shirley Meng told a packed house on Friday, Oct. 6, at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance in downtown Chicago. “It is a reality that we already are working on.”

Meng presented what she called “the case for hope” as part of the independently organized, local nonprofit lecture series TEDxChicago. This year’s theme was “We Dare.”

“Chicago has always been a daring city,” Attendee Experience Lead Kelly Fernandez told the assembled crowd. “We dare to dream. We dare to disrupt. We dare to defy the odds.”

Meng dares to hope. Facing the devastating realities of global climate change, Meng shared some of her impressive work at UChicago’s Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, at the Laboratory for Energy Storage and Conversion and as chief scientist for the Argonne Collaborative Center for Energy Storage Science to present a comprehensive and achievable pathway to a clean, sustainable energy future.

“It is not a dream. It is a reality that we already are working on.”

Prof. Y. Shirley Meng on a renewable energy future